YES!
But before establishing support
for this answer, we must ask why this is an important question for
libertarians. Campbell's scholarship, as
exemplified in perhaps his most famous book, The Hero With a Thousand Faces, proposed that the human psyche is
the same everywhere in the world and for every time period because the myths of
all cultures, as stories of heroes, have similar patterns (here he follows
Jung-more about this later). According
to Archer Taylor (1964), his scholarship on the hero's journey is very similar,
yet more detailed, than others working on the same problem (p. 128). He even saw the entrepreneur as "the
real hero" in capitalist society (see excerpt of interview at the end of
the article). If Campbell's
thinking, which is a result of studying many cultures, can be shown to support
libertarian philosophy, it would greatly add to the cause of freedom and
limited government around the world.
Tuesday, September 29, 2020
Freedom and Mythology: Did Joseph Campbell have Libertarian Tendencies?
Before
examining his views in relation to libertarian philosophy, a few comments on
the nature of myths and mythology are necessary.
Campbell was not alone in
his view that myths are reflections of the psyche. It is a standard belief that not only are myths
symbolic representations of our psyches, but that the role of the hero in myth
is universal and that myths help to instruct individuals in charting a course
for their own lives. This assertion is
based on the work of psychoanalysis.
This is because in myths, according to Campbell (1968) "symbolic
expression is given to the unconscious desires, fears, and tensions that
underlie the conscious patterns of human behavior" and that understanding
the myth puts us in touch with "the deep forces that have shaped man's
destiny and must continue to determine both our private and our public
lives" (p. 255-6).
Leeming (1973) shares this view (p. 9) along with, according to Barnaby
and D'Acierno (1990), a large number of Jungian interpreters (p. 3). Jung (1951) himself said "Myths are
original revelations of the pre-conscious psyche, involuntary statements about
unconscious happenings..." (p. 101).
In
addition to influencing film makers like George Lucas and Steven Spielberg, Campbell was well
respected. The psychologist James Hillman said "No one in our century, not
Freud, not Thomas Mann, or Lévi-Strauss, has so brought the mythical sense of
the world back into our everyday consciousness" (Cousineau, 1990, p. 178).
Campbell's
model of the hero's adventure is also quite similar to Leeming's (1973) and
Mircea Eliade's (1990, p. 39). Segal
(1990) shows that Campbell's
hero is Jungian (p. 42) and similar to Erik Erickson's in that the hero's
journey is a quest for personal identity (p. 34). Jung (1956) himself said that the hero
archetype represents this need of the human psyche (p. 178). Eliot (1990) reports that, in fact, Jungian
therapists use Campbell's
work in guiding their patients' journey (p. 232). Even modern Freudians see myths as a useful
tool (Segal, 1990, p. 44).
This
is also an era in which mythology is being used to understand economics. Silver (1991) analyzes the ancient economy
through mythology while Putka (1993) reports that business case studies are now
being written which compare literary figures, including heroes, to business
managers (p. A1). Even two business
professors at Stanford University, Catford and Ray (1991), have written a
popular book on mythology partly inspired by Campbell.
So it is not surprising that Eliade (1990) wrote "The mythic
imagination can hardly be said to have disappeared; it is still very much with
us, having only adapted its workings to the material now at hand" (p. 42).
One
question that arises in trying to promote heroism is the question of is the
hero trying to do good work or trying to rise above and gain control over the
rest of society. Our society has a
tendency to think the latter. This may
be due in part to the decline in reading mythological texts and other stories
about cultural heroes in our educational system. If we could reverse this trend, we would no
longer have to fear the hero (Silber, 1989, ch. 3, "Of Mermaids and
Magnificence"). If heroes represent
the elite, I think Campbell
would have agreed with Silber. He said:
"Sport is really an elite experience. You can't have a game where everybody
wins. But there's an awful lot of that
kind of thinking in our sociological thinking now where nobody should be
beating anybody else and let's fix it so he can't. Then you spend the rest of your life looking
at a movie to see whether you can see a real elite performance. That's where life really is-in the upper
brackets, not the lower ones" (Cousineau, 1991, p. 220).
David Justin Ross made a similar
argument on the need for heroes in literature and how they teach values in his
article "Boy's Fiction and the Dumbing of America" from the April
1993 issue of Liberty.
Given
the importance of mythology and Campbell's
contributions to the study of it, how do they relate to libertarianism? It may surprise many to learn that Joseph
Campbell told Bill Moyers "The state is a machine" in "The
Message of the Myth," the second televised segment of the popular PBS
series The Power of Myth. This condemns the state in Campbell's
view because the machine can crush our humanity, a serious problem the entire
world, including the United
States, faces today. But this rejection of mechanized government
is just one of several ways in which his ideas can be seen as supporting
libertarian philosophy. The first is his
support of individualism. The second is
his support of the ideas of the founding fathers and limited government. The third is Campbell's surprisingly similarity to some
ideas of the economist Milton Friedman, a proponent of laissez-faire
capitalism. The fourth is an
anti-Marxist sentiment. The fifth is the
above mentioned view of the state as a machine.
Each of these will be discussed in more detail below. Campbell's
view of the mechanized state is discussed last.
To
begin with the first category, individualism,
Campbell (1988) said, while discussing the story of the Holy Grail, that
"[E]ach of us is a completely unique creature and that if, we are ever to
give any gift to the world, it will have to come out of our own experience, not
someone else's." That is, not the experience of some government bureaucrat
that is imposed on us. It is hard to
have your own experience if you are controlled by the state (p. 151). This great Western Truth (p. 151) is opposed
to the Orient where "the individual is cookie-molded" (p. 151).
He underscored this with:
"The best
part (emphasis added) of the western tradition has included a recognition
of and respect for the individual as a living entity. The function of the society is to cultivate
the individual. It is not the function
of the individual to support society"
(p. 192)"
Furthermore, the troubadour
courage to love that grew in the middle ages against the opposition to the
church became the basis of individualism and validated individual experience as
opposed to tradition (p. 187)
The
second category is Campbell's
support and approval of the Founding Fathers and their belief in limited
government and individual reason. This
is indicated in a number of ways. The
first is that Campbell
(1988) agrees that all men are capable of reason, thus knowing God:
"That is the fundamental principle of
democracy. Because everybody's mind is
capable of true knowledge, you don't have to have a special authority, or a
special revelation telling you that this is the way things should be" (p. 25)
Although democracy is not necessarily synonymous with
libertarianism, to Campbell, it meant the rejection of anyone
being granted "special authority."
This is certainly an ideal of libertarians, that no one has a monopoly
on truth. The second is that Campbell
felt we moved away from reason and the ideals of limited government found in
the Declaration of Independence when we "rejoined the British conquest of
the planet" (p. 28) in World War I.
According to him America
fell from the ideal, moral high ground of the pyramid (symbolized by the eye at
the top of one on the back of the dollar bill) by breaking Washington's pledge in his farewell address
to stay out of European affairs. The
third is that in general, Campbell
was very taken by the symbolism of the Founding Fathers. He felt that they had a great understanding
of mythology, using this knowledge to
create a new nation based on individual liberty and limited government (p. 25).
In
the third category of his support for libertarian thinking, some of Campbell's views (or at
least instincts) are similar to three ideas of Milton Friedman's. The first is that they both condemn "the
man of system." Campbell states this clearly while speaking
of the character Darth Vader from the Star
Wars movie trilogy. He is critical
of him being an "executive of a system" who has no humanity (see p.
10 for more details). Friedman (1978) writes about this. The man of system is a government planner, a
bureaucrat who wishes to impose his own ideals on society (p. 18). In what way is Campbell similar? Although earlier it was noted that Campbell (1988)
contrasted the West's individualism with the conformity of the East, he does
mention what he thinks is a good
Oriental idea: "You don't force
your mission down people's throats"
(p. 63). Also, "Instead of
clearing his own heart, the zealot tries to clear the world" (Campbell,
1968, p. 16) Both Campbell and Friedman
fear the planner who will force his system on the rest of us. Campbell's
(1988) views on this are best expressed in his comments on Darth Vader, the
evil dark lord of the Star Wars movie
trilogy.
"Darth Vader has not developed his own
humanity. He's a robot. He's a bureaucrat living not in terms of
himself but in terms of an imposed system.
This is the threat that we all face today. Is the system going to flatten you out and
deny you your humanity, or are you going to be able to make use of the system
so that you are not compulsively serving it?
It doesn't help to try to change it to accord with your system of
thought. The momentum of history behind
it is too great for anything really significant to evolve from that kind of
action" (p. 144)
This point will be addressed
again in the section on the state as a machine.
The second way in which
Campbell and Friedman are similar is their view on the ultimate end or goal of
life. Friedman (1962) objected to the old adage that "the end justifies
the means." He felt it was better to state that "the ultimate end is
the use of proper means" (p. 22).
The appropriate means are "free discussion and voluntary
co-operation" (p. 22). This is
similar to not only Campbell's
(1988) emphasis on democracy and individualism but also to one of his favorite
quotes from Karlfried Graf Dürckheim: "The real end is the journey"
(p. 230). That is, it is being able to
go on your own journey that counts, not the destination. For both of them, life is living by the
right process. For Campbell this is taking your own individual
journey. This is not in conflict, and
probably consistent with, Friedman's ideal of free discussion and voluntary
cooperation.
The
third way in which Friedman and Campbell are similar may be more instinctual,
not always expressed-that is, a shared sense of ultimate reality. One of Friedman's (1984) books is called The Tyranny of the Status Quo. The title gives us an idea of his sensitivity
to an issue deeper than just the left-right debate. Of the bureaucratic establishment's reaction
to the Reagan administration's attempt to reduce taxes and regulations in its
first few months in office Friedman says "The tyranny of the status quo
asserted itself. Every special interest group that was threatened proceeded to
mount a campaign to prevent its particular governmental sinecure from being
eliminated" (p. 2). These feelings
and actions show up in the following passage of Campbell (1968):
"... the mythological hero is the champion not of
things become but of things becoming; the dragon to be slain by him is
precisely the monster of the status quo:
Holdfast, the keeper of the past.
From obscurity the hero emerges, but the enemy is great and conspicuous
in the seat of power; he is enemy, dragon, tyrant, because he turns to his own
advantage the authority of his position.
He is Holdfast not because he keeps the past but because he keeps"
(p. 337).
Both Friedman and Campbell see
the status quo as a monster that acts a tyrant over creative people.
The
fourth category of Campbell's
support for libertarianism, his anti-Marxist sentiment, is seen where he
discusses Don Quixote. In Campbell (1988) Quixote
had "saved the adventure for himself by inventing a magician who had just
transformed the giants he had gone forth to encounter into windmills" (p.
130). Heroes used to live in a more spiritually
alive world. Quixote used his
imagination to make it more alive. Why
is our world today not spiritually alive?
Because the world
"... has become to such an extent a sheerly mechanistic (emphasis added) world, as
interpreted through our physical sciences, Marxist sociology, and behavioristic
psychology, that we're nothing but a predictable pattern of wires responding to
stimuli. This nineteenth century
interpretation has squeezed the freedom of the human will out of life" (p.
130-1).
Although not a new critique, it
is a devastating condemnation of Marxist thinking from an individualistic
perspective. When the state is a
machine, the world is mechanistic, people are predictable, and central planning
of economies is justified. Campbell opposes
this, exalting the freedom of the human
will over these machine views of man.
Campbell (1988) prefers,
as in the Hindu idea of karma, that "you have no one to blame but
yourself" (p. 161) for your problems.
He also implies that Marx was wrong when he "tells us to blame the
upper class of our society" (p. 161).
Again, Campbell
rejects Marxism and favors individualism.
The
fifth category involves Campbell's
view of the state as a machine. To him,
this makes the state a monster, an instrument that imposes its will or system on individuals, crushing our
humanity and creative spirit. Since the
state is a machine, it is a kind of technology.
The message Campbell
(1988) saw from the movie Star Wars is an old but powerful one: "technology is not going to save
us" (p. xiv). Luke Skywalker uses the Force (which,
according to Campbell,
symbolizes the human heart and intuition) instead of a computer to destroy the
empire's dreaded death star, a machine that can itself destroy entire planets.
Earlier
it was seen how Campbell
viewed Darth Vader. He was an
undeveloped human individual, a bureaucrat living in terms of an imposed
system. Campbell further explains how this is
significant with:
"The fact that the evil power is not identified
with any specific nation on this earth means you've got an abstract power which
represents a principle, not a specific historic nation. The story has to do with an operation of
principles, not this nation against that.
The monster masks that are put on people in Star Wars represent the real
monster force in the modern world"
(p. 144).
The significance of this passage
is clear when linked with an earlier passage:
"Man should not be in the service of society,
society should be in service of man.
When man is in the service of society, you have a monster state, and
that's what is threatening the world today" (p. 8).
So Campbell was concerned about the
"monster state" in our modern world.
Darth Vader served the monster state as a bureaucrat and as a result hid
his human face behind a monster mask. This implies that a state that demands
service from individuals not only turns them into monsters but is monstrous
itself, although it is not clear how far Campbell would have gone in making
this claim. This is why libertarians, as
did Campbell,
think that the state should do whatever it can to promote individuality and
individual rights. The mechanistic,
Marxist view Campbell
spoke of in relation to Don Quixote is perhaps what has brought on this monster
state. If human beings were
"nothing but a predictable pattern of wires" then socialism and
economic planning might make sense. But
obviously it does not since socialism has failed. But here too, Campbell (1988) provides a useful
interpretation. It is in relation to the
Holy Grail:
"The theme of the Grail romance is that the land,
the country, the whole territory of concern has been laid to waste. It is called a waste land. And what is the nature of the wasteland? It is a land where everyone is living an
inauthentic life, doing as other people do, doing as you're told, with no
courage for you own life. That is the
wasteland. And that is what T. S. Eliot
meant in his poem The Waste Land.
"In
a wasteland the surface does not represent the actuality of what it is supposed
to be representing, and people are living inauthentic lives. 'I've never done a thing I wanted to in all
my life. I've done as I was told.' You
know" (p. 196).
Bill Moyers then asked the
question "And the Grail becomes?"
Campbell
answered with "The Grail becomes the-what can we call it-that which is
attained and realized by people who have lived their own lives. The Grail represents the fulfillment of the
highest spiritual potentialities of the human consciousness" (p
196-7). Unless you have a minimal state,
individuals are not really living their own lives. Furthermore, Campbell says that "there are some
societies that shouldn't exist" (p. 198).
The societies that try to crush the individual spirit eventually
"crack up" (p. 198). This
explains the conditions in Eastern Europe
today. The socialist systems blocked a
re-circulation of spiritual energy by preventing people from walking their own
paths. Any system that prevents energy
flow from outside the status quo will collapse due to entropy. This is explained in what Campbell (1968) called the monomyth in (following James Joyce):
"The standard path of the mythological adventure
of the hero is a magnification of the formula represented in the rites of
passage: separation-initiation-return:
which might be named the nuclear unit of the monomyth. A hero ventures forth from the world of
common day into a region of supernatural wonder: fabulous forces are there encountered and a
decisive victory is won: the hero comes back from this mysterious adventure
with the power to bestow boons on his fellow man"(p. 30).
Too much government control will
create a wasteland.
This
is all seen much more clearly in an exchange between Campbell and Moyers from
the second televised segment of The Power
of Myth called "The Message of the Myth."
Moyers: Do you see some of the new metaphors emerging
in the modern medium for the old universal truths that you've talked about, the
old story?
Campbell:
Well, I think that the Star Wars is a valid mythological perspective for
the problem of is the machine-and the state is a machine (emphasis
added)-is the machine going to crush humanity or serve humanity? And humanity comes not from the machine but
from the heart.
[As the unmasking of Darth Vader
scene from the movie The Return of the
Jedi is shown, Campbell continues:]
Campbell:
The father (Darth Vader) had been playing one of these machine roles, a
state role; he was the uniform, you know?
And the removal of that mask-there was an undeveloped man there. He was kind of a worm by being the executive
of a system. One is not developing one's
humanity. I think George Lucas did a
beautiful thing there.
Moyers: The idea of machine is the idea that we want
the world to be made in our image and what we think the world ought to be.
[Campbell seemed to agree or at least offered
no dissent to this statement of Moyers.]
Campbell put this in a
slightly different way when he also discussed the movie Star Wars:
"Here the man (George Lucas) understands
metaphor. What I saw was things that had
been in my books but rendered in terms of the modern problem, which is man and
machine. Is the machine going to be the
servant of human life? Or is it going to
be master and dictate? And the machine
includes the totalitarian state, whether it is Fascist or Communist it's still
the same state. And it includes things happening in this country too
(emphasis added); the bureaucrat, the machine-man."
What
a wonderful power the machine gives you-but is it going to dominate you? That's the problem of Goethe's Faust.
It's in the last two acts of Faust,
Part Two. His pact is with
Mephistopheles, the man who can furnish you the means to do anything you
want. He's the machine
manufacturer. He can manufacture the
bombs, but can he give you what the human spirit wants and needs? He can't.
This
statement of what the need and want is must come from you, not from the
machine, and not from the government that is teaching you (emphasis
added) or not even from the clergy. It has to come from one's own inside, and
the minute you let that drop and take what the dictation of the time is instead
of your own eternity, you have capitulated to the devil. And you're in hell.
That's
what I think George Lucas brought forward.
I admire what he's done immensely, immensely. That young man opened a vista and knew how to
follow it and it was totally fresh. It
seems to me that he carried that thing through very, very well (Cousineau, 1990,
p. 181-2).
Later, when asked if the state
should redistribute income for a more equal distribution, Campbell further criticizes an excessive role
for the state with:
"In an equitable distribution system you never level
people up, you always level down. And
civilization comes from what's on top.
And it's one thing to be equitable and give everything away; it's another thing to be equitable and give
away yourself. Then you really can't
help anybody, can you? That's a little
bit like the ego-self problem. In actual
economic situations this is complicated by the specifics of the situation, and
I can't talk about that" (Cousineau, 1990, p. 225).
Although he wisely avoids
claiming any expertise in economics, his views support the notion that too much
taking from the rich and giving to the poor by the government hurts incentives,
which in the long run hurts everyone since total output falls. The poor do not become richer; the rich
become poorer. But the idea of giving
away yourself is consistent with what Campbell
(1988) said:
"The influence of a vital person vitalizes, there's
no doubt about it. The world without
spirit is a wasteland. People have the
notion of saving the world by shifting things around, changing the rules, and
who's on top and so forth. No, no! Any world is a valid one if it's alive. The thing to do is to bring life to it, and
the only way to do that is to find in your own case where the life is and
become alive yourself" (p. 149).
On often hears libertarians say
"Utopia is not an alternative." I think that is what Campbell is saying here. The idea that an individual can revitalize
society is found in the economic
historian John Hughes's book The Vital
Few: The Entrepreneur and American
Economic Progress. He argued that
individual entrepreneurs played a vital
role in the development of the American Economy.
Finally,
my own research, in a paper titled "The Creative-Destroyers: Are Entrepreneurs Mythological Heroes?"
I find that the entrepreneur is a hero, verifying Campbell's assertion mentioned at the
beginning of the paper (which he never tried to verify). I used Campbell
(1968) for the comparison. The more
entrepreneurship that is allowed, the more creativity and authentic lives there
will be. Laissez-faire capitalism (i.e.,
a minimal role for the state) seems to allow for the greatest degree of
entrepreneurship. In Briggs and Maher
(1989), Campbell
says:
"There's a kind of regular morphology and
inevitable sequence of experiences if you start out to follow your
adventure. I don't care whether it's in
economics, in art, or just in play. There's
the sense of the potential that opens out before you." (p. 25).
In Cousineau
(1990), Campbell
describes the profit in following your own adventure: "If you follow your
bliss, doors will open up for you where they would not have opened up
before. They will also open up for you
where they would not have opened up for anyone else" (p. 214). This is ultimately the best life for an
individual, no matter what the career path or time period.
Before closing, religion, a topic closely
related to mythology, and an important one for libertarians, must be
discussed. Campbell saw the two as closely related. This need not cause problems for
libertarians, who, according to the 1988 poll conducted by Liberty,
tend to be less religious than the rest of society. It was mentioned at the beginning of the
paper that Campbell was a follower of Jung, who
gave him (Campbell)
"the best clues he's got" (Briggs and Maher, 1989, p. 123). Campbell
(1986) agreed with Jung's view of religion, that its purpose was to keep you
from God or a real spiritual experience (p. 121). If libertarians are less religious than
others, perhaps this allows them a better chance for a real spiritual
experience because they follow their own individual paths. In fact, as stated earlier, Jung said that
the hero archetype represented this need of the psyche (which he called
individuation). That is, you discover
yourself by going on your own adventure.
Jung (1964) too, was critical of the state. He saw our belief in the welfare state as
childish (p. 85). According to Fordham (1964) he even thought that Western
man's penchant for objective reality tended to rob the psyche of its value
which leads to "the deification of such abstractions like the State"
(p. 74). Szasz (1988), who gives Jung a
mixed but generally favorable review, saw him (Jung), as being less
authoritarian than others in his profession and a proponent of individualism
who tried to help others "find their own faiths as befits intelligent
adults in the twentieth century" (p. 163).
Campbell
wrote very little on his preferences for the role of government outside what
has been interpreted here. Segal (1990)
says that he was politically conservative (p. 21). Perhaps this was true for
the role of government in the economy.
But given his strong support for individualism, his views would be the
essence of libertarianism. He would not
likely have approved much regulation of personal behavior. Of course, he seems to have never come out
and said that he himself was a libertarian.
It would be foolish to make him into something after his death. His views on the machine-like state and
individualism could be interpreted as supporting the need for a welfare state
that helps individuals against monopolistic capitalists. He was occasionally critical of business and
money making. But he never said or wrote
anything that indicated he supported socialism or the welfare state. His work
and ideas do seem to support the values of individualism and limited government
(see excerpt of interview at the end of the article). These, along with his antipathy for imposed
systems, tyrannical status quos and Marxist thinking seem to accord with
libertarian thinking.
Tape #1901: "Call of the Hero" with Joseph Campbell
interviewed by Michael Toms
New Dimensions Foundation audio tape from a live interview on
San Francisco's
radio station KQED
The following
exchange was part of a discussion the question of: What is creativity?
Toms: In a sense it's the going for, the jumping
over the edge and moving into the adventure that really catalyzes the
creativity, isn't it?
Campbell:
I would say so, you don't have creativity otherwise.
Toms: Otherwise there's no fire, you're just
following somebody else's rules.
Campbell:
Well, my wife is a dancer. She
has had dance companies for many, many years.
I don't know whether I should talk about this. But when the young people are really
adventuring, it's amazing what guts they have and what meager lives they can be
living, and yet the richness of the action in the studio. Then, you are going to have a concert
season. They all have to join a
union. And as soon as they join a union,
there character changes. (emphasis
added, but Campbell
changed the tone of his voice) There are rules of how many hours a day you can
rehearse. There are certain rules of how many weeks of rehearsal you can
have. They bring this down like a sledge
hammer on the whole thing. There are two
mentalities. There's the mentality of
security, of money. And there's the
mentality of open risk.
Toms: In other societies we can look and see that
there are those that honor elders. In
our society it seems much like the elders are part of the main stream and there
is a continual kind of wanting to turn away from what the elders have to say,
the way it is, the way to do it. The
union example is a typical one, where the authority, institution, namely the
union comes in and says this is the way it's done. And then one has to fall into line or one has
to find something else to do.
Campbell:
That's right.
Toms: And it's like treating this dichotomy between
elders and the sons and daughters of the elders. How do you see that in relationship to other
cultures?
Campbell:
This comes to the conflict of the art, the creative art and economic
security. I don't think I have seen it
in other cultures. The artist doesn't
have to buck against quite the odds that he has to buck against today.
Toms: The artist is honored in other cultures.
Campbell:
He is honored and quickly honored.
But you might hit it off, something that really strikes the need and
requirements of the day. Then you've
given your gift early. But basically it
is a real risk. I think that is so in
any adventure, even in business, the man who has the idea of a new kind of gift
(this is exactly what George Gilder says in chapter three, "The Returns of
Giving" in his book Wealth and
Poverty) to society and he is willing to risk it. Then the workers come in and claim they are
the ones that did it. Then he (the
entrepreneur) can't afford to perform his performance. It's a grotesque conflict, I think between
the security and the creativity ideas.
The entrepreneur is a creator, he's running a risk.
Toms: Maybe in American capitalistic society the
entrepreneur is the creative hero in some sense.
Campbell:
Oh, I think he is, I mean the real one.
Most people go into economic activities not for risk but for
security. You see what I mean. And the elder psychology tends to take over.
This discussion
ended and after a short break a new topic was discussed.
References
Barnaby, Karin and Pellegrino
D'Acierno, eds. (1990).C. G. Jung and the
Humanities, Princeton: Princeton University
Press.
Briggs, Dennie and John M. Maher
(1989). An Open Life: Joseph Campbell in Conversation with Michael Toms. New York: Harper and Row.
Campbell, Joseph (1968). The
Hero with a Thousand Faces. Princeton:
Princeton University
Press.
Campbell, Joseph (1986). The
Inner Reaches of Outer Space. New
York: Harper and Row.
Campbell, Joseph (1988). The
Power of Myth. New York:
Doubleday.
Catford, Lorna and Michael Ray
(1991). The Path of the Everyday Hero.
Los Angeles: Tarcher.
Cousineau, Phil (1990). The
Hero's Journey: Joseph Campbell on His
Life and Work. San
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